How Much Does It Cost to Replace a Water Service Line?
You know the sinking feeling you got when you stepped in that giant puddle in your front lawn and the mud swallowed your sneakers up to the ankles like the quicksand your 10-year-old self just knew you’d get stuck in one day? Well, you can resign yourself to sinking some more when it turns out that you’re in need of an exterior water line replacement as opposed to a mere repair at roughly a quarter of the price. We’re about to go deep on just how deep into your pockets you’re gonna hafta dig to pay for this worst-case-scenario expense.
This May Also Interest You: What’s an Exterior Water Service Line?
Speaking of digging, excavation is a major portion of the overall cost of replacing your exterior water line — a job that may also call for fitting external valves, fusing, welding, pipe cutting, locating a leak and backfilling — so don’t expect it to be dirt cheap. On the bright side, we can help prepare you for the price so at least you won’t be suffering sticker shock when the contractor quote comes in.
Umm, If the Issue Is Underground, How Am I Supposed to Know?
In all likelihood, you’ll know. Maybe not immediately, unfortunately, but at some point, there will be signs. Be it discolored water coming out of your faucets, low water pressure, inexplicably high water bills, potholes, sunken spots in your driveway or sidewalk or soggy spots in the grass that refuse to dry up, the water leaking from your underground line will somehow make itself known.
But one thing’s for sure: The sooner you identify the issue and hire a contractor to address it, the more you’ll be able to mitigate damage to your property. Now, wherever possible, HomeServe’s editorial team encourages homeowners to consider DIY solutions, but due to the scope and complexity of exterior water service line repair, this is one job best left to the pros.
Back Up a Sec … How's This My Problem?
We’ll forgive you for not realizing that your responsibility for your home’s vital systems doesn’t stop at the soil. It’s likely true that your local government is responsible for the water main under your street, as well as the pipe that stretches from the main and underneath public right-of-way to bring fresh water from the municipal supply up to the edge of your property line. But where the line meets your lawn? That’s on you.
So, basically, if it falls within anywhere you’d yell at kids to get off your lawn, it’s your problem.
What Did I Do to Deserve This?
It’s not your fault … well, it could be your fault — but a lot of different things could’ve caused enough damage to your underground water line that it needs to be replaced. Careless digging or overly aggressive yardwork are ways in which you may, indeed, be to blame. But other possible causes of leaks, breaks and all-out system failure are pipe aging or corrosion, ground shifting, invading tree roots and, arguably the most common culprit: extreme temperature swings.
In warmer climes such as in the South, water service lines are buried less than 3 feet deep because winters are seldom extreme enough to freeze the ground past the relatively shallow frost line (the operative word there being seldom, as evidenced by the Great Dallas Deep Freeze of 2021). Meanwhile, in the coldest areas, such as the Northern and Northeastern U.S., water lines may be buried more than 8 feet underground to prevent freezing in those regions' depth-plumbing frost line.
Pipe depth affects the replacement cost, as the technician must access the broken line in order to work on it — so the deeper they’ve gotta dig, the more time and effort the job requires. That drives up the price.
OK, What’s the Damage?
To give you an idea of what you can expect to pay for your water service line replacement, HomeServe has calculated the average costs, both nationally and state by state, for comparison. In order to determine what’s wrong with your system, you’ll have to call someone out to diagnose the problem, which comes with its own cost. We’ve calculated that average, as well. As we mentioned, the depth of your pipes has a bearing on cost, so we’ve listed the average depth here, too.
For a broader look at water service line expenses, check out our cost guide covering pricing averages for both repair and replacement state by state. And for a closer look at what factors into how much you’ll pay to get a water service line simply fixed as opposed to replaced outright, go to our state-by-state repair cost guide.
Below, you’ll find the average costs for water service line repair in your state, plus the average depths the water lines are buried. All figures are based on aggregated HomeServe data reported by our network of thousands of contractors across the nation. Where insufficient data was available to determine a verifiable average, we’ve noted so.
(At the time of this publication, another factor dramatically driving up costs was pandemic-precipitated materials shortages, impacting home maintenance, repair and construction sectors across the board; those supply-chain issues are generally expected to be temporary and are not reflected here.)
Nationwide
- Diagnosis: $222
- Replace: $3,581
- Service Line Depth: 4.58 feet
State by State
1. Alabama
- Diagnosis: $126
- Replace: $2,961
- Service Line Depth: 2.49 feet
2. Alaska
- Diagnosis: Insufficient data
- Replace: Insufficient data
- Service Line Depth: Insufficient data
3. Arizona
- Diagnosis: $190
- Replace: $2,654
- Service Line Depth: 2.82 feet
4. Arkansas
- Diagnosis: $230
- Replace: $2,687
- Service Line Depth: 3.67 feet
5. California
- Diagnosis: $168
- Replace: $3,062
- Service Line Depth: 3.17 feet
6. Colorado
- Diagnosis: $152
- Replace: $4,423
- Service Line Depth: 6.16 feet
7. Connecticut
- Diagnosis: $150
- Replace: $4,088
- Service Line Depth: 7.32 feet
8. Delaware
- Diagnosis: $152
- Replace: $3,125
- Service Line Depth: 4.45 feet
9. District of Columbia
- Diagnosis: $98
- Replace: $1,431
- Service Line Depth: 4.00 feet
10. Florida
- Diagnosis: $179
- Replace: $2,731
- Service Line Depth: 2.53 feet
11. Georgia
- Diagnosis: $287
- Replace: $3,125
- Service Line Depth: 3.08 feet
12. Hawaii
- Diagnosis: Insufficient data
- Replace: Insufficient data
- Service Line Depth: Insufficient data
13. Idaho
- Diagnosis: $195
- Replace: $3,484
- Service Line Depth: 4.95 feet
14. Illinois
- Diagnosis: $159
- Replace: $3,435
- Service Line Depth: 5.26 feet
15. Indiana
- Diagnosis: $143
- Replace: $2,971
- Service Line Depth: 3.83 feet
16. Iowa
- Diagnosis: $184
- Replace: $3,021
- Service Line Depth: 5.97 feet
17. Kansas
- Diagnosis: $126
- Replace: $3,103
- Service Line Depth: 4.68 feet
18. Kentucky
- Diagnosis: $150
- Replace: $2,471
- Service Line Depth: 3.75 feet
19. Louisiana
- Diagnosis: $199
- Replace: $2,973
- Service Line Depth: 3.81 feet
20. Maine
- Diagnosis: $170
- Replace: $3,330
- Service Line Depth: 5.00 feet
21. Maryland
- Diagnosis: $112
- Replace: $2,974
- Service Line Depth: 5.11 feet
22. Massachusetts
- Diagnosis: $158
- Replace: $2,493
- Service Line Depth: 4.79 feet
23. Michigan
- Diagnosis: $208
- Replace: $3,413
- Service Line Depth: 6.07 feet
24. Minnesota
- Diagnosis: $174
- Replace: $5,369
- Service Line Depth: 8.27 feet
25. Mississippi
- Diagnosis: $241
- Replace: $2,493
- Service Line Depth: 2.52 feet
26. Missouri
- Diagnosis: $126
- Replace: $3,437
- Service Line Depth: 5.15 feet
27. Montana
- Diagnosis: $206
- Replace: $5,211
- Service Line Depth: 5.64 feet
28. Nebraska
- Diagnosis: Insufficient data
- Replace: $4,818
- Service Line Depth: 5.80 feet
29. Nevada
- Diagnosis: $92
- Replace: $1,439
- Service Line Depth: 3.50 feet
30. New Hampshire
- Diagnosis: Insufficient data
- Replace: $5,809
- Service Line Depth: 5.00 feet
31. New Jersey
- Diagnosis: $123
- Replace: $3,343
- Service Line Depth: 5.04 feet
32. New Mexico
- Diagnosis: $188
- Replace: $2,712
- Service Line Depth: 3.96 feet
33. New York
- Diagnosis: $137
- Replace: $4,790
- Service Line Depth: 5.02 feet
34. North Carolina
- Diagnosis: $205
- Replace: $3,218
- Service Line Depth: 3.89 feet
35. North Dakota
- Diagnosis: $198
- Replace: $5,243
- Service Line Depth: Insufficient data
36. Ohio
- Diagnosis: $268
- Replace: $2,899
- Service Line Depth: 5.76 feet
37. Oklahoma
- Diagnosis: $138
- Replace: $2,568
- Service Line Depth: 2.90 feet
38. Oregon
- Diagnosis: $185
- Replace: $3,359
- Service Line Depth: 4.05 feet
39. Pennsylvania
- Diagnosis: $159
- Replace: $3,154
- Service Line Depth: 4.62 feet
40. Rhode Island
- Diagnosis: $195
- Replace: $5,294
- Service Line Depth: 6.00 feet
41. South Carolina
- Diagnosis: $308
- Replace: $2,596
- Service Line Depth: 2.68 feet
42. South Dakota
- Diagnosis: $153
- Replace: $4,487
- Service Line Depth: 6.30 feet
43. Tennessee
- Diagnosis: $195
- Replace: $2,716
- Service Line Depth: 3.07 feet
44. Texas
- Diagnosis: $211
- Replace: $2,382
- Service Line Depth: 2.93 feet
45. Utah
- Diagnosis: $94
- Replace: $2,200
- Service Line Depth: 4.16 feet
46. Vermont
- Diagnosis: Insufficient data
- Replace: $2,933
- Service Line Depth: 4.00 feet
47. Virginia
- Diagnosis: $209
- Replace: $3,175
- Service Line Depth: 4.58 feet
48. Washington
- Diagnosis: $243
- Replace: $3,530
- Service Line Depth: 3.18 feet
49. West Virginia
- Diagnosis: $252
- Replace: $3,020
- Service Line Depth: 3.88 feet
50. Wisconsin
- Diagnosis: $123
- Replace: $4,801
- Service Line Depth: 6.82 feet
51. Wyoming
- Diagnosis: $164
- Replace: $4,032
- Service Line Depth: 6.37 feet
More Related Articles:
- Water Line Insurance: What It Is and Why You Need It
- Does a Home Warranty Cover Water and Sewer Lines?
- Pipe Burst? Here’s What to Do Next
- Should You Go Pro or Try DIY for Your Sewer Line Repair? Here’s What You Should Know
- Prevent Frozen-Pipe Problems by Knowing These Things Down Cold
Video produced and directed by Eric Rossi: